This article was published on October 13, 2023

VC funding in Europe rose in Q3 2023, but favoured late-stage startups

Meanwhile, seed and early-stage rounds hit their lowest point


VC funding in Europe rose in Q3 2023, but favoured late-stage startups

In the third quarter of 2023, European startups raised $16.4bn (€15.6bn) in VC funding β€” a 28% increase quarter over quarter.

The findings are based on an analysis by Crunchbase, which also unveiled that the fresh capital has mostly favoured late-stage rounds. In contrast, funding for seed and early-stage companies hit its lowest points since Q3 2022.

Specifically, late-stage funding doubled quarter over quarter, reaching $10.5bn (€10bn) in total. Notably, VCs invested large sums in the sustainable energy sector, with big rounds raised by Sweden’s H2 Green Steel, battery manufacturers Northvolt and Verkor, and London-based battery storage startup Zenobe Energy.

Μeanwhile, seed funding added up to $1.4bn (€1.3bn), down from $2.1bn (€2bn) last year. Alongside its 30% year-over-year drop, it also fell by 25% quarter over quarter. Similarly, early-stage companies saw another low at $4.5bn (€4.3bn) with the largest amount of capital invested in Series A.

On the bright side, European startups have managed to raise a bigger proportion of global venture capital compared to last year. Their share reached approximately 23%, while VC funding in North America remained flat. Europe’s AI companies also accounted for close to one-fifth of the sector’s global funding, representing 11% of the region’s total capital raised in the past quarter.

Overall, Europe’s highest capital injection was concentrated in the UK, followed by Sweden, France, and Germany.

β€œThe pullback in venture has made a huge difference in how capital-efficient a startup needs to be,” said Michiel Kotting, partner at Northzone, a London-headquartered multi-stage VC firm.

He noted, however, that the amount of capital raised isn’t the only measure of success for tech companies, adding that the economic downturn β€œdoes not make entrepreneurship harder or disfavor tech.”

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